Man dies after freak dump crash

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A man has died in Waikato Hospital after being seriously injured in a bizarre accident at the Waihi transfer station.

Hamilton police confirmed the man, 84, had died as a result of serious injuries caused when he was thrown from his vehicle yesterday.

The quick-as-a-flash incident unfolded in front of the tip operator Alan Irvine at 10.15am on the western outskirts of Waihi.

The man was the second customer to roll into the Hauraki District Council facility at the end of Dean Cres that day.

Irvine told him where to dump his single bag of rubbish.

He watched as the man drove his Toyota Corona to the edge of the tarseal platform as if he was going to reverse into position, but he noticed the door open.

Irvine isn't sure what happened next.

"It was so violent," Irvine recalled at the scene.

"He must have somehow got his feet caught up in the pedals and he's hit the accelerator full on. It's gone at full speed in reverse and done a full 360.

"The car was going that fast he didn't have the time to do anything."

Part way through the skid the man's torso was thrust out the door and dragged along the rough tarseal before he was thrown out of the driver's seat.

"It was pretty scary. The car going full bore backwards. It really spun around so fast it was like being thrown off a horse or something." The car stopped just as suddenly only millimetres from where the man lay.

"When he first got ejected, I can hear it now, [he was] just crying out for help - he was crying out," Irvine said.

"He came to rest so close to the car I thought it was on top of him."

Irvine described it as a strange, unfortunate accident.

He phoned 111 immediately and called for help to a couple who had been sorting their recycling nearby.

"We were lucky there was an expert firefighter who arrived. He came into my office and got towels and the first aid box. When I finally got off the 111 call I came over."

The man, who was a regular at the station and was "always nice and polite", was in a bad way.

His head was bleeding and one of his arms was a bloody mess after being dragged across the chipped seal at speed.

There was "quite a bit of blood" yet the man remained conscious throughout and "must have been in a lot of pain".

Irvine said the man was by himself in the area at the time and had acted normally until the rapid reversal.

"If there were more people, he could have hit someone for sure. I was pretty shaken up at the time."

Waihi Volunteer Fire Brigade chief fire officer Moe Stevens said he had never seen anything like it.